General News of Tuesday, 13 November 2018

Source: ghananewsagency.org

Government spends GHC 927 million on poverty eradication projects

There are some communities living under extreme poor conditions There are some communities living under extreme poor conditions

A total of 2,623 poverty eradication and infrastructure projects are being implemented by Government through the Ministry of Special Development Initiatives, at the cost of 927 million cedis.

The funding for the projects came from the 2018 Budget of GHc1.2 billion allocated to the Ministry, while 23 million cedis has so far been paid to the contractors who raised certificates for payment.

Some of the projects include; Small Dams and Dug-outs (Village-One Dam),1000-Metric Tonnes Fabricated Warehouses, Water and Sanitation for All,10-seatet Water Closet Institutional Toilets with mechanized boreholes, Community-based Mechanised Solar Powered System and One Ambulance Per Constituency.

There are 1,151 projects ongoing in the Northern Belt comprising the three northern regions, 781 in the Middle Belt made up of the Brong Ahafo, Ashanti and Eastern regions and 691 in the Southern Belt, comprising the Western, Central, Greater Accra and Volta regions.

Ms Mavis Hawa Koomson, the Minister of Special Development Initiatives, said this when she took her turn at the Meet-the-Press series in Accra, on Tuesday.

The meeting afforded the Sector Minister the opportunity to inform the public about the Ministry’s activities and successes chalked over the past 20 months; and also enabled journalists and media practitioners to ask her questions of public interest for clarification.

Ms Hawa Koomson, who is the Member of Parliament for Awutu Senya in the Central Region, provided the unit cost of the each of the project as follows: the water system cost between GHC 90,000 and GHC 120,000 each, the water closet cost between GHC 150,000 and GHC 170,000 and the warehouse amounted to GHC 1.8 million each, while the small dams cost between GHC 200,000 and GHC 250,000.

Explaining the mandate of the Ministry, the Minister said it was established by the Akufo-Addo-led Government to accelerate the development of priority projects geared towards poverty eradication, access to clean water and sanitation, agriculture transformation, reduction of inequalities and the local infrastructure development.

To this end, she said, the Government, through the Ministry, implemented the Infrastructure for Poverty Eradication Programme (IPEP), aimed at attaining government’s priority areas in consistent with the United Nations Development Goals (SDGs), particularly goals one, two, six and 10.
She said the Ministry was collaborating with the three Development Authorities to implement the priority projects adding that the projects that would not be completed this year and would be rolled over in the ensuing years.
“The Ministry is confident that the successful implementation of IPEP projects across the country will significantly increase the availability of infrastructure for socio-economic development.

This intervention will contribute immensely towards the attainment of Government goals of accelerating poverty eradication and minimizing all forms of inequalities at the constituency level, predominantly in deprived communities,” Ms Hawa Koomson emphasised.

On how the beneficiary communities were selected, the Sector Minister said a 10-member team was selected in July last year in each region to visit the various constituencies, who talked to the traditional rulers and indigenes to ascertain their priority needs, which informed the Ministry to implement those projects.

Some of the priority initiatives include the Small Dams and Dug-outs (Village-One Dam),1000-Metric Tonnes Fabricated Warehouses and Markets, Water and Sanitation for All,10-seatet Water Closet Institutional Toilets with mechanized boreholes, Community-based Mechanised Solar Powered System and One Ambulance per Constituency.

The rest are Community Markets, Community-based Health Planning Systems (CHPS) compounds, community specific infrastructure needs such as drainage system, footbridges and community centres, as well as re-shaping of roads, renovation of schools and provision of desks for schools.
The Minister said her doors were opened to assist interested individuals and politicians, including former President John Mahama, who interrogated the existence of those projects, to visit the locations when they put in a request.

Meanwhile, she said, the locations and other relevant information about the ongoing projects would be posted on the Ministry’s website next week for easy verification by the citizenry; while efforts would be made to link the projects to the Ghana Post digital address system.